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Volume 1 (1946), 1

Articles

(Original title: Problém existenčného kontinua ako reálnej identity)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 104-137.
Abstract
According to general recognition 'the development of philosophical scientific thinking is characterized already from the ancient Greek epoch by the influences of the antinomical conception of subject and object. The central point of antinomies was the abstract conception of identity, which included identity of object in time and space. This proiblem is the… Read more
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(Original title: Objekt a smysl objektu)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 138-155.
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(Original title: K problému nevedomia u Freuda)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 156-170.
Abstract
After a short historical introduction we discuss the problem of unconscious as it is learned by Freud. The Unconscious is, he says, the very psychical reality; the conscious thinking is to it in a analogical relation as our sensory perception to Kant’s »Ding an sich«. The Unconscious is not governed iby the law of reality, it’s purpose is to protect the individuum… Read more
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(Original title: G. W. Leibniz (К 300. výročiu narodenia))
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 171-181.
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(Original title: Poznámky k dielu Krištofa Akaiho „Cosmografia seu philosophica mundi descriptia“)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 182-202.
Abstract
As an introduction to Akai’s book we give an outline of development of antique philosophy and we show how the problems of natural philosophy, which is the very substance of Akai s work, were discussed in it’s separate epochs. Akai’s work is mainly based on scholastic philosophy — it is in fact a late flower of scholastic and therefore it was necessary to mention the… Read more
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(Original title: Obrodenská koncepcia Ľudovíta Štúra)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 21-67.
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(Original title: Reálny svet a jeho poznávanie)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 68-103.
Abstract
As the starting-point in discussing noetical problems we may choose the first phase of humen mind’s development, winch precedes tne stadpomt of naive realism. Primitive human beings live in a mystical complexity with nature without conscious splitting of the world in subject and object. We can follow this splitting of the world through the history of human mind s… Read more
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(Original title: Sociálne a politické javy dneška)
Philosophica Slovaca, 1 (1946), 1, 7-20.
Abstract
After the Great war a sociologist must be interested in certain problems. Firstly it is the disparity between the development of the intellect a of moral abilities. The moral progress does not keep pace with progress of technical sciences. Further-as a consequence of the last two wars-we see on one side a growth of democratis nationalism, on the other side at the… Read more
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